A little over a year after he rose to national prominence by quitting his job as a JetBlue flight attendant - via a meltdown that included screaming at a passenger and sliding down the emergency escape - this Long island resident is free from the constraints of the law.

The former Jet Blue flight attendant has somehow landed a contract with a company called Line 2. It specializes in a cell phone app that provides in-flight texting for those on airplanes that have Wi-Fi - and the first campaign features Slater rapping. Yes, rapping.

With his 15 minutes of fame long over with, Steven Slater has agreed to a legal deal that ensures he'll avoid prison.

The former JetBlue flight attendant, who resigned his post in hilarious fashion in August, pled guilty this morning to two counts of criminal mischief. Instead of jail time, Slater will spend one year in a Queens mental health program.

It looks like Steven Slater won't spend any time in jail for his abrupt, anger-filled resignation from the world of flight attending.

The man who briefly rose to fame for telling passengers on a JetBlue airline to take his job and shove it appeared in a NYC court today. Facing up to seven years in prison, TMZ reports Slater agreed to a round of mental health treatment in exchange for a lesser sentence.

His 15 minutes may have been up weeks ago, but JetBlue has returned Steven Slater's name to the headlines.

The airline has announced that the man who hilariously, dangerously resigned amidst a curse-filled, emergency slide-utilized tirade will NOT be rehired by the company. Spokeswoman Jenny Dervin said on Saturday that Slater, who says he's return to the job, will never work for JetBlue again.

New reports indicate that the disgruntled JetBlue flight attendant may have been the one who instigated a confrontation on last week's flight, while many THG readers have expressed dismay over Slater possibly landing a reality show out of the ordeal.

In the Least Shocking News of the Year department, Steven Slater has reportedly been offered a reality show.

Multiple sources inside the industry confirm that Stone Entertainment - the production company behind such gems as The Mole and The Man Show - has approached the world's most famous flight attendant to host a program that focuses on workers quitting their jobs in extreme ways.

The moment everyone has talked about all week - when flight attendant Steven Slater peaced out of a JetBlue flight, and employment with the company, via the aircraft's inflatable slide - was captured on tape by cameras at JFK.

The footage was first obtained by WNBC in New York. Surveillance cameras from the New York airport's terminal clearly show his bailout on Monday.

Steven Slater might have thousands of fans on Facebook, along with the support of over 80% of THG readers, but there's one outspoken celebrity that doesn't see why the disgruntled flight attendant is a hero.

"What he did was despicable. I think as an employee he's horrible and as an employer I would really go after him big," Donald Trump told The Insider this week.